If you lived in Steubenville, Ohio in the late 1800s, you surely would have known about the eccentric Dotey family and their wealth. The family patriarch, Calvin B. Dotey, made his fortune from iron. His children, however, did not work a day in their lives. His son, Harry, wore his hair long and dressed in bright pink shirts with a large Catholic Cross around his neck; he wanted everyone to call him Harry Linwood Marie Dotey y Carr. Along with his sister Molly, a baroness from a failed marriage, the pair squandered away the family fortune, literally under the nose of their aged father, filling the house with expensive art and furniture. When all the money was spent, Molly was forced to go to the Jefferson County Poorhouse, an event that made national headlines. When dismantling the family home, instead of donating the hundreds of toys from his childhood, Harry ensured that every piece was destroyed so no other child could use them. He died in a local insane asylum.